Michael J. Fischer, head of the Border Patrol, said in a
conference call with reporters that immigrant smugglers were
increasingly using rock-throwing as a way to drive away patrols.
Since 2010, agency personnel have opened fire 43 times, killing 10
people, in response to 1,713 rock-throwing attacks against them,
Fischer said in the preface to a directive he issued to agents.
He said three officers had been killed in more than 6,000 assaults
on agents since 2007.
Hundreds of thousands of people each year illegally cross the U.S.
border with Mexico, which is also a major drug-running route into
America.
In the directive, Fischer told agents not to open fire "unless the
agent has a reasonable belief, based on the totality of the
circumstances, to include the size and nature of the projectiles,
that the subject of such force poses an imminent danger of death or
serious injury."
Instead of firing at rock-throwers, the directive said, "agents
should obtain a tactical advantage in these situations, such as
seeking cover or distancing themselves from the immediate area of
danger."
Border patrols have been criticized in recent years over concerns
that agents may have sometimes been too quick to open fire. Sixteen
members of Congress called for a review of use-of-force incidents
and policy in 2012. The agency said in September it would train
officers to defuse threats.
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In one recent incident, an agent shot and killed a suspected illegal
immigrant last month during a confrontation not far from the border
with Mexico in the Otay Mountain area east of San Diego after the
agent was pelted with rocks, the U.S. Border Patrol said.
The directive also said an agent should not fire on "a moving
vehicle unless the agent has a reasonable belief, based on the
totality of the circumstances, that deadly force is being used
against an agent or another person present."
It told supervisors in the Border Patrol, which is part of the U.S.
Department of Homeland Security, to use alternatives to deadly
force, including equipment to deflate tires and using
"less-than-lethal equipment."
(Reporting by Mark Hosenball; editing by David Storey and Mohammad Zargham)
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